Podcast appearances and mentions of eugene goostman

  • 12PODCASTS
  • 15EPISODES
  • 43mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Mar 20, 2023LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about eugene goostman

Latest podcast episodes about eugene goostman

Adolfo Neto
"Há limites para a Inteligência Artificial? Sobre a Filosofia no caso ChatGPT", com Walter Carnielli e mediação de Marcos Silva

Adolfo Neto

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2023 73:42


Este episódio é a republicação do áudio de uma live que aconteceu em 18/03/2023 no canal do Coletivo Lógica Viva. Caso prefira ver as imagens, acesse https://www.youtube.com/live/pyrbJi_QEac. Abaixo a descrição da live: O Lógica Viva convida você para mais uma live! Você já ouviu falar em ChatGPT? É um tema em alta, com muita gente falando sobre. Mas você tem conseguido acompanhar bem o debate? Nesta live, o Prof. Walter Carnielli vai discutir junto com o Prof. Marcos Silva sobre o ChatGPT buscando refletir sobre as seguintes questões: -O que é ChatGPT? Qual é o limite de capacidade do ChatGPT? - Como se compara o ChatGPT com IAs similares como as da Microsoft? Há outros concorrentes similares ao ChatGPT? - O ChatGPT passa no teste de Turing? Explicando rapidamente o que é o Teste de Turing. Como o ChatGPT lida com questões éticas como responsabilidade social (por exemplo, uso sem responsabilidade) em veículos não tripulados, racismo, intolerância religiosa, xenofobia,homofobia, etc? - O ChatGPT está levantando ou reacendendo questões filosóficas? Quais seriam elas? É verdade que o ChatGPT frustrou alguns pesquisadores, agora estão prevendo um "novo inverno" da IA? O ChatGPT pode ser usado para o mal, como por exemplo para gerar fake news ou desinformação? Você acredita que teremos no futuro um "ponto de singularidade" onde a IA sobrepujará os humanos? ++++ Referências: 1) Alan Turing O Teste de Turing: como determinar se uma IA é capaz de pensar? O Teste de Turing foi proposto há 73 anos atrás em seu artigo “Computing Machinery and Intelligence” (Mind 49: 433-460, 1950) e aborda capacidade das máquinas pensarem, pelo menos em simular a inteligência humana.Um computador que afirmava ser um adolescente ucraniano de 13 anos, chamado Eugene Goostman, passou em 2014 numa versão mais reduzida do Teste de Turing. 2) Ludwig Wittgenstein "Os limites da minha linguagem são os limites do meu mundo." L.Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, 5.6 3) A indecidibilidade do Problema da Parada A. M. Turing (1937). "On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem". Proceedings of the London Mathematica 4) AI pode auxiliar a inteligência human, mas não subsitui-la: faltam as noções de "explicação" e de "causa-e-efeito" Tammy Xu. AI Makes Decisions We Don't Understand. That's a Problem. Fixing it won't be easy, however. https://builtin.com/artificial-intelligence/ai-right-explanation 5) Fenômenos emergentes em grandes IAs Stephen Ornes. The Unpredictable Abilities Emerging From Large AI. Quanta magazine March 17, 2023 https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-unpredictable-abilities-emerging-from-large-ai-models-20230316/ Emergent Abilities of Large Language Models. Jason Wei + 15 Transactions on Machine Learning Research (08/2022) https://openreview.net/pdf?id=yzkSU5zdwD 6) O Apocalipse Filosófico W. A. Carnielli. How AI can be surprisingly dangerous for the philosophy of mathematics— and of science Circumscribere Vol. 27 (2021) Online https://revistas.pucsp.br/index.php/circumhc/article/view/55033 Acompanhe nossas redes: https://www.instagram.com/logicaviva.coletivo/ https://www.youtube.com/@logicaviva https://twitter.com/logica_viva --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/adolfont/message

Current Affairs
Why You Don't Need To Worry About "Superintelligent AI" Destroying The World (But Artificial Intelligence Is Still Scary)

Current Affairs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2022 48:43


Some, including both geniuses like Stephen Hawking and nongeniuses like Elon Musk, have warned that artificial intelligence poses a major risk to humankind's future. Some in the "Effective Altruist" community have become convinced that artificial intelligence is developing so rapidly that we could soon create "superintelligent" computers that are so much smarter than us that they could take over and pose a threat to our existence as a species. Books like Nick Bostrom's Superintelligence and Stuart Russell's Human Compatible have warned that we need to get machine intelligence under control before it controls us. Erik J. Larson is dubious about the chances that we'll produce "artificial general intelligence" anytime soon. He argues that we simply have no idea how to simulate important kinds of intelligent reasoning with computers, which is why even as they seem to get much smarter, they also remain very stupid in obvious ways. Larson is the author of The Myth of Artificial Intelligence: Why Computers Can't Think The Way We Do (Harvard University Press) which shows that there are important aspects of intelligence that we have no clue how to make machines do, and that while they're getting very good at playing Go and generating images from prompts, AI systems are not making any progress toward possessing the kind of common sense that we depend on every day to make intelligent decisions. Larson says that a lot of progress in AI is overstated and a lot of people who hype up its potential don't grasp the scale of the challenges that face the project of creating a system capable of producing insight. (Rather than producing very impressive pictures of cats.)Today, Erik joins to explain how different kinds of reasoning work, which kinds computers can simulate and which kinds they can't, and what he thinks the real threats from AI are. Just because we're not on the path to "superintelligence" doesn't mean we're not creating some pretty terrifying technology, and Larson warns us that military and police applications of AI don't require us to develop systems that are particularly "smart," they just require technologies that are useful in applying violent force. A Current Affairs article on the "superintelligence" idea can be read here. Another echoing Larson's warnings about the real threats of AI is here. The "Ukrainian teenager" that Nathan refers to is a chatbot called Eugene Goostman. The transcript of the conversation with the "sentient" Google AI is here.The image for this episode is what DALL-E 2 spat out in response to the prompt "a terrifying superintelligent AI destroying the world." 

Mind Matters
An Excerpt from Chapter Two of Non-Computable You

Mind Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 19:35


What You Do That Artificial Intelligence Never Will by Mind Matters podcast host Robert J. Marks is now available in audiobook form. Listen now to an excerpt from the second chapter as read by Larry Nobles. Will machines someday replace attorneys, physicians, computer programmers, and world leaders? What about composers, painters, and novelists? Will tomorrow's supercomputers duplicate and exceed humans?… Source

Klugschwätzer hoch zwei
Lunchbreak #37: Herausforderung Turing-Test

Klugschwätzer hoch zwei

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2022 14:26


Bis heute konnte noch keine KI den klassischen Turing-Test offiziell und allgemein anerkannt bestehen. Neue interessante Studien zeigen, warum dies so sein könnte und warum nicht mal wir Menschen den Test ohne Weiteres bestehen.Timestamps & Quellen:Begrüßung & Einführung (00:00)Teil 1: Der Turing-Test (00:42)Was ist der Turing-Test"Eugene Goostman" und der Zweifel an dessen SiegKIs, die eine abgewandelte Form des Test bestanden haben: Review-KI, Kunst-KIKritik am Loebner-Preis (1, 2, 3)Teil 2: Wie schwer ist es den Turing-Test zu bestehen? (04:47)Studie: Nicht mal Menschen bestehen den Turing-Test ohne WeiteresTeil 3: Überzeugende Menschlichkeit (07:04)Studie: Minimaler Turing-TestAbmoderation & Verabschiedung (13:53)Falls ihr unsere Arbeit unterstützen wollt, würden wir uns sehr freuen, wenn ihr uns auf Spotify, Apple-Podcast und Google-Podcast folgen und bewerten würdet. Aktiviert auch gerne die Glocke, um keine neuen Episoden zu verpassen.Unsere Social-Media-Seiten:Instagram, Twitter, Facebook - wir freuen uns über jeden Follow.

Conspiracy Clearinghouse
The Dead Internet Theory

Conspiracy Clearinghouse

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 46:34


EPISODE 55 | The Dead Internet Theory Weirdly similar but also somewhat nonsensical tweets, emails that seem written by bots, the same posts showing up again and again - something seems to be amiss with the internet. And some people think they have found the answer: the internet died a few years ago and is now almost entirely run by sophisticated AI bots. This is the Dead Internet Theory. We'll look at the reasoning behind this notion, a timeline of events that includes some creepy real-world DARPA projects, the state of AI and computer-brain interfaces, and a peek at the (possibly) approaching Singularity - when humans and machines will essentially blend into one thing. Special shoutout to Gerd Altmann, who made most of the images use din the video version of this episode and made them available on Pixabay.  Like what we do? Then buy us a beer or three via our page on Buy Me a Coffee. #ConspiracyClearinghouse #sharingiscaring #donations #support #buymeacoffee You can also SUBSCRIBE to this podcast. Review us here or on IMDb! See a video version on our YouTube channel. SECTIONS 02:14 - Imitation Is the Sincerest Form of Monetization - clone emails, I hate texting, @Capr1corn, @itspureluv, spoof websites, web bots, the Inversion, deepfakes 09:13 - The Dead Internet Theory - IlluminatiPirate sniffs out a truth, stupid stuff online, doors vs wheels, the early net was better/sucked, Solipsism 13:36 - The Metaverse gets handsy, the web is soulless, it's all a mindset, Pantone 448C 18:11 - Something Rotten in the State of Denmark - Tracing the DIT, standardization runs amuck, algorithm fiction, CGI and deepfakes, many internets, wag the dog 22:18 - A timeline of terror: DARPA's LifeLog, Facebook, Total Information Awareness, using Basketball for precrime, No Such Agency, Smith-Mundt Modernization Act, Project Mockingbird, Operation Mockingbird, Google's Selfish Ledger, NMT, Face2Face, Narrative Science, In-Q-Tel 29:37 - A problem of scale: Google search results are ridiculous, there are a lot of stupid people, our brains suck, are you trapped?, link rot, awesome stuff on the web, Yvette's Bridal Formal, Flat Earth News 37:02 - No 9000 Computer Has Ever Made a Mistake or Distorted Information. We Are All, by Any Practical Definition of the Words, Foolproof and Incapable of Error - Strong AI, the Turing Test, Eugene Goostman, autonomous vehicles 41:17 - Human-computer interfaces, Neuralink, Brown University's wireless interfaces 42:33 - One, Singular Sensation, Every Little Step She Takes - The Singularity approaches, transhumanism, immortality (of a sort), Ray Kurzweil and technofaith Music by Fanette Ronjat More Info: Dead Internet Theory in The Atlantic Dead Internet Theory in The Daily Free Press We're Living in the 90s on Agora Road The Internet Is A Potemkin Village: Proof Of Dead Internet Theory? More thoughts (and science) on the Dead Internet A video on The Dead Internet Theory Total Number of Websites How Much of the Internet Is Fake? Turns Out, a Lot of It, Actually. Bad Bot Report 2021: The Pandemic of the Internet The Metaverse Is on the Way: Here's What You Need to Know The metaverse has a groping problem already The Wheels Vs. Doors Debate Tearing the Internet Apart Yvette's Bridal Formal The World's Worst Website Ever! Pentagon Kills LifeLog Project Q&A on the Pentagon's "Total Information Awareness" Program on ACLU Scientists dispute whether computer 'Eugene Goostman' passed Turing test The Internet Is Rotting Jonathan Zittrain Explains Why the Internet Is Rotting Facebook just released a database of 100,000 deepfakes to teach AI how to spot them The Strange Story of Google's "Selfish Ledger" Google's Selfish Ledger ideas can also be found in its patent applications The Only Way Google X's Selfish Ledger Is "Good" The State of AI in 2022: Current State & Predictions What is limiting the autonomous driving rollout? The Current State of Play in Autonomous Vehicles on Hackaday The first successful wireless human brain-computer interface is here. Eat your heart out, Neuralink. Singularity: Explain It to Me Like I'm 5-Years-Old on Futurism Singularity Group website Digital Freedom Fund Digital Freedom Foundation Flat Earth News by Nick Davies The Singularity is Near by Ray Kurzweil Follow us on social for extra goodies: Facebook (including upcoming conspiracy-themed events) Twitter YouTube (extra videos on the topic, Old Time Radio shows, music playlists and more) Other Podcasts by Derek DeWitt DIGITAL SIGNAGE DONE RIGHT - Winner of the 2021 AVA Digital Award Gold, 2021 Silver Davey Award & 2020 Communicator Award of Excellence, and on numerous top 10 podcast lists.  PRAGUE TIMES - A city is more than just a location - it's a kaleidoscope of history, places, people and trends. This podcast looks at Prague, in the center of Europe, from a number of perspectives, including what it is now, what is has been and where it's going. It's Prague THEN, Prague NOW, Prague LATER.

Eu queria saber...
#38 - Teste de Turing

Eu queria saber...

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 8:10


É possível que uma máquina se torne tão parecida com um humano a ponto de ser indistinguível? Alan Turing se perguntou isso, e eu quis saber. Talvez você também queira :) REFERENCIAS "Alan Turing", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing; "Alan Turing", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing; "Teste de Turing, acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teste_de_Turing; "O que é o Teste de Turing?", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://medium.com/turing-talks/turing-talks-1-o-que-é-o-teste-de-turing-ee656ced7b6; "Teste de Turing", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://iaexpert.academy/2016/07/19/historico-da-ia-teste-de-turing/; "Um computador passou pela primeira vez no teste de Turing", acessado dia 29/12/20, https://tecnoblog.net/157935/computador-passou-primeira-vez-teste-de-turing/; "Pela primeira vez no mundo, computador engana pessoas e passa no teste de Turing", acessado dia 29/12/20, https://canaltech.com.br/ciencia/Pela-primeira-vez-na-mundo-computador-engana-pessoas-e-passa-no-teste-de-Turing/; "Teoria da Computabilidade", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teoria_da_computabilidade; "Grau de Turing", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grau_de_Turing; "Bomba Eletromecânica", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bomba_eletromecânica; "Bombe", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombe; "Eugene Goostman", acessado no dia 29/12/20, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Goostman; Eugene Gootsman HomePage, acessado no dia 29/12/20, http://eugenegoostman.elasticbeanstalk.com/;

Sped up Rationally Speaking
Rationally Speaking #113 - The Turing Test

Sped up Rationally Speaking

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2021 51:36


Did you know that an artificial intelligence named "Eugene Goostman" recently passed the Turing Test, our gold standard criterion for whether an AI is conscious? At least, that's what many media outlets breathlessly reported. In this episode of Rationally Speaking, Julia and Massimo take a critical look at Eugene, and at the Turing test in general as a standard for consciousness. In the process they debate what it would mean for an AI to be conscious, and how we could ever tell. Sped up the speakers by ['1.0', '1.04']

Mind Matters
Bingecast: Selmer Bringsjord on the Lovelace Test

Mind Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2020 92:39


The Turing test, developed by Alan Turing in 1950, is a test of a machine’s ability to exhibit intelligent behaviour indistinguishable from a human. Many think that Turing’s proposal for intelligence, especially creativity, has been proven inadequate. Is the Lovelace test a better alternative? What are the capabilities and limitations of AI? Robert J. Marks and Dr. Selmer Bringsjord discuss… Source

Mind Matters
Bingecast: Selmer Bringsjord on the Lovelace Test

Mind Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2020 92:39


The Turing test, developed by Alan Turing in 1950, is a test of a machine’s ability to exhibit intelligent behaviour indistinguishable from a human. Many think that Turing’s proposal for intelligence, especially creativity, has been proven inadequate. Is the Lovelace test a better alternative? What are the capabilities and limitations of AI? Robert J. Marks and Dr. Selmer Bringsjord discuss… Source

Cock & Bull Minute: A Tristram Shandy Story
25 - The Bracket Is Dead, Long Live the Bracket, Part 5, with Thomas Howeth (Group 14, Part 1)

Cock & Bull Minute: A Tristram Shandy Story

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2020 21:34


#ExMachina vs #EternalSunhineoftheSpotlessMind. Mentioned: DMing D&D, CritStorm Cast, The Lobster, IMDb app, Annihilation Minute, Eugene Goostman, and Replika.

Mind Matters
The Turing Test is Dead. Long Live The Lovelace Test

Mind Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2020 27:25


The Turing test, developed by Alan Turing in 1950, is a test of a machine’s ability to exhibit intelligent behaviour indistinguishable from a human. Many think that Turing’s proposal for intelligence, especially creativity, has been proven inadequate. Is the Lovelace test a better alternative? Robert J. Marks and Dr. Selmer Bringsjord discuss the Turing test, the Lovelace test, and machine Read More › Source

Mind Matters
The Turing Test is Dead. Long Live The Lovelace Test

Mind Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2020 27:25


The Turing test, developed by Alan Turing in 1950, is a test of a machine’s ability to exhibit intelligent behaviour indistinguishable from a human. Many think that Turing’s proposal for intelligence, especially creativity, has been proven inadequate. Is the Lovelace test a better alternative? Robert J. Marks and Dr. Selmer Bringsjord discuss the Turing test, the Lovelace test, and machine… Source

Data Skeptic
Eugene Goostman

Data Skeptic

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2018 17:15


In this episode, Kyle shares his perspective on the chatbot Eugene Goostman which (some claim) "passed" the Turing Test. As a second topic Kyle also does an intro of the Winograd Schema Challenge.

turing test eugene goostman
Rationally Speaking
Rationally Speaking #113 - The Turing Test

Rationally Speaking

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2014 52:23


Did you know that an artificial intelligence named "Eugene Goostman" recently passed the Turing Test, our gold standard criterion for whether an AI is conscious? At least, that's what many media outlets breathlessly reported. In this episode of Rationally Speaking, Julia and Massimo take a critical look at Eugene, and at the Turing test in general as a standard for consciousness. In the process they debate what it would mean for an AI to be conscious, and how we could ever tell.

Six Degrees of Rumination
Episode 23: 6/25/14 The artificiality of life, and when life gets too real

Six Degrees of Rumination

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2014 54:05


Join Nina, Reno, and producer Mike to explore the many faces of salad, as well as what you might consume if you give up food altogether.  Would you eat a colorless, nearly tasteless sludge in the name of efficiency and sustainability? What do you think of AI?  Could it ever be so well done that it fools real humans?  Reno, Nina, and Mike discuss.  As Eugene Goostman might say, "Oh, what a fruitful conversation ;-)"Harvard is reasonably sure their university library houses a book that's bound in human skin.  Arse'ne Houssayee's French treatise, "Des destine'es de l'ame" (On the Destiny of the Soul) is an example of anthropodermic bibliopegy.  It came to the library in 1934, and the skin was supposedly taken from a woman's back.Beware the fungus among us--although it's not humungous.  Ophiocordyceps unliateralis is a parasite that lodges itself inside ants' brains, controlling their movements and turning them into tiny zombies.  http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2014/06/10/320321553/the-salad-frontier-why-astronauts-need-to-grow-lettuce-in-spacehttp://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2014/06/25/325189711/kandinsky-on-a-plate-art-inspired-salad-just-tastes-better?sc=twhttp://robrhinehart.com/?p=298http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Goostman http://www.scottaaronson.com/blog/?p=1858http://mobile.nytimes.com/blogs/artsbeat/2014/06/05/harvard-confirms-book-is-bound-in-human-skin/?_php=true&_type=blogs&smid=nytimesarts&_r=0http://www.sciencechannel.com/tv-shows/through-the-wormhole/videos/this-fungus-turns-victims-into-the-crawling-dead.htmhttp://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2014/06/25/325188747/these-bathroom-lights-tell-you-where-its-ok-to-go*Special edition: Episode 23.5 at the Santa Cruz Mystery Spot!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NglZqExcRQk

soul harvard reno artificiality eugene goostman